Samuel Glasstone, The Effects of Atomic Weapons, U.S. Department of Defense, first published in June 1950, revised edition September 1950. U.S. Government non-copyright work. Selected extracts of value today for civil defence in included only (obsolete material is omitted). Review:
http://glasstone.blogspot.co.uk/The reason why Glasstone's book has been ignored or used for such false propaganda is that it is not very readable.
This compressed summary aims to make the key facts clearer.
The FULL text of all editions of Glasstone and Dolan can be read online at HathiTrust’s digital library, http://www.hathitrust.org/
See also https://archive.org/details/TheEffectsOfNuclearWeapons
Samuel Glasstone (Editor), The Effects of Nuclear Weapons, U.S. Department of Defense and U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, 1964 edition: edited down to civil defense information. Contains a vital civil defense chapter 12, "Principles of Protection", which was omitted from the final 1977 edition. (Obsolete material and technical material which is not relevant to civil defense is excluded.)
See also: The effects of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan (the secret U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey report 92, Pacific Theatre) located at: http://archive.org/details/TheEffectsOfTheAtomicBombOnHiroshima
Compare to the civil defense material extracted from the June 1957 edition of "The Effects of Nuclear Weapons" at https://archive.org/details/Anderson_shelter
The 1977 edition of "The Effects of Nuclear Weapons" omitted the fire prevention evidence and photographs from the 1953 Upshot-Knothole ENCORE test which was included in the 1957 and 1962/4 editions, leading to the myth of "nuclear winter" due to firestorm mythology in 1983. It also replaced the "Principles of Protection" chapter with a new chapter on the EMP, leading to claims by Jonathan Schell in his 1984 book of New Yorker magazine essays, "The Fate of the Earth" that Glasstone's book disproves the possibility of surviving nuclear weapons effects.
Schell for example omits the simple improvised fallout shielding advice from the 1964 edition of Glasstone and claims that the 1954 15-megaton Bravo bomb fallout would doom anyone within a 7,000 square mile area, ignoring the fact that you have to remain outdoors in an unobstructed desert to get the radiation doses given in the 1977 edition of Glasstone's book. In addition, Schell's best-selling book misquotes Glasstone's range for threshold (small sized) retina burns to rabbits in aircraft exposed facing the fireball in a clear radial line-of-sight from the August 1958 high altitude 3.8 megaton Teak test at 77 km burst height, claiming falsely that the rabbits were blinded hundreds of miles from the 15 megaton Bravo surface burst. In fact, nobody had eye damage on Rongelap atoll, 115 miles from Bravo, although unwarned and unprotected.
See also: The effects of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan (the secret U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey report 92, Pacific Theatre) located at: http://archive.org/details/TheEffectsOfTheAtomicBombOnHiroshima
See also the 1957 edition of Glasstone in compressed form: https://archive.org/details/TheEffectsOfNuclearWeapons1957